The game ends when all the letter tiles of a player (the first to finish) are exhausted/used/played on the scrabble board.
Either (1) when one player plays all their letters, and there are no more tiles remaining to draw OR (2) when no players can play any of the tiles in their rack.
Each Scrabble (R) player draws seven tiles to start. And after each play, a player replaces any tiles used or traded so he always ends his turn with seven tiles (excepting near game end, when the tiles run out). For complete Scrabble rules, see the Related Link.
When you use all your letters at the end of the game you get to add the letter score from the letters on your opponent's rack (not their entire game score).
Scrabble is a word game that can be played with two to four players. There are 100 tiles in total. The object of the game is to score more points than your opponents, by making words. You get points when you place your letters on the board (when it's your turn of course). The letters/tiles are marked by numbers which show you how much they are worth. There are two blank tiles which have no point value, which means they aren't worth any points. The only good thing about the two blank tiles is that you can use them to substitute for any letter you want, but again, you don't get any points for that blank tile.To start the game, mix up the tiles/letters in a bag. Each person grabs one tile/letter and the one closest to the letter "A" starts the game. Mix up the tiles again. Each person grabs seven tiles/letters (no peeking when getting your tiles). The person can start the game by placing two or more tiles/letters on the board. If the person who starts the game doesn't have any vowels or just doesn't like their tiles, he or she has the option to exchange them, but they will not have the option to place their tiles, until it's their turn again. The person starting the game can place any letter on the board where the star is. The first word that is played is doubled. When a person puts a tile on the board, that person must grab the same amount of tiles they placed. For example, if a person placed five tiles on the board, that same person grabs five tiles from the bag. The game continues with each person taking turns making words. The person that uses all seven tiles and makes a legit word scores 50 points, which is called a Bingo. Landing on the special colors (also known as premium or bonus squares) on the board will gain the player more points. Words can be challenged, but if a word is legit, the player who challenged the word loses their turn. If the word is notlegit, then the player who placed their word, must place their tiles back on their rack and loses the chance at placing a word. Also, you can only challenge someone, for the word that is currently being played and only if the next person after them has not placed their tiles on the board. Play continues until there are no more tiles left in the bag, when someone has used all of their tiles toward the end of the game, or when all players have passed on their turn twice in a row, then the game ends. The people that have tiles left, have to add them up and subtract them from their scores. The one with the highest score wins.
If there is a few tiles in the bag and all players are out of moves (no words can be made), then the game can end.
The game ends when all the letter tiles of a player (the first to finish) are exhausted/used/played on the scrabble board.
Yes, the game ends when one player played all his/her letter tiles and there are no more letter tiles left in the bag.
Either (1) when one player plays all their letters, and there are no more tiles remaining to draw OR (2) when no players can play any of the tiles in their rack.
The Scrabble tiles are numbered so that points can be added (during game play) or deducted (subtracting tiles only occurs at the end of the game) to see which player has the highest points. The player with the highest points wins the game.
Each Scrabble (R) player draws seven tiles to start. And after each play, a player replaces any tiles used or traded so he always ends his turn with seven tiles (excepting near game end, when the tiles run out). For complete Scrabble rules, see the Related Link.
The objective of Scrabble is to score more points in the game than other players. Points can be scored at each of your turns by utilizing your tiles to spell words that will maximize the number of points earned at each turn. At the end of the game, the player with the cumulative final number of points wins the game.
You can either find another player or end the game.
Scrabble has a scoring system, where tiles like Q and Z has 10 pts, X and J has 8, K has 5, and other tiles less. This, in combination with premium squares( double word, triple letter etc.), a score can be derived in accordance with the words and tiles used. A 'bingo' will score an additional 50 pts. The person with the highest score wins.
When you use all your letters at the end of the game you get to add the letter score from the letters on your opponent's rack (not their entire game score).
Scrabble is a word game that can be played with two to four players. There are 100 tiles in total. The object of the game is to score more points than your opponents, by making words. You get points when you place your letters on the board (when it's your turn of course). The letters/tiles are marked by numbers which show you how much they are worth. There are two blank tiles which have no point value, which means they aren't worth any points. The only good thing about the two blank tiles is that you can use them to substitute for any letter you want, but again, you don't get any points for that blank tile.To start the game, mix up the tiles/letters in a bag. Each person grabs one tile/letter and the one closest to the letter "A" starts the game. Mix up the tiles again. Each person grabs seven tiles/letters (no peeking when getting your tiles). The person can start the game by placing two or more tiles/letters on the board. If the person who starts the game doesn't have any vowels or just doesn't like their tiles, he or she has the option to exchange them, but they will not have the option to place their tiles, until it's their turn again. The person starting the game can place any letter on the board where the star is. The first word that is played is doubled. When a person puts a tile on the board, that person must grab the same amount of tiles they placed. For example, if a person placed five tiles on the board, that same person grabs five tiles from the bag. The game continues with each person taking turns making words. The person that uses all seven tiles and makes a legit word scores 50 points, which is called a Bingo. Landing on the special colors (also known as premium or bonus squares) on the board will gain the player more points. Words can be challenged, but if a word is legit, the player who challenged the word loses their turn. If the word is notlegit, then the player who placed their word, must place their tiles back on their rack and loses the chance at placing a word. Also, you can only challenge someone, for the word that is currently being played and only if the next person after them has not placed their tiles on the board. Play continues until there are no more tiles left in the bag, when someone has used all of their tiles toward the end of the game, or when all players have passed on their turn twice in a row, then the game ends. The people that have tiles left, have to add them up and subtract them from their scores. The one with the highest score wins.
15 ft * 13 ft = 195 sq ft The area of a 4 ft sq tile is 16 sq ft so you would need 195/16 = 12.19 = 13 tiles. However, this assumes that nearly all the offcuts are used. An alternative approach is that you would need 4 tiles end-to-end to do the length of the room and 4 tiles end-to-end to do the width. So you will require 4*4 = 16 tiles in all. This assumes that none of the offcuts are used. Both approaches assume that there is no wastage, that is none of the tiles break in such a way that they are completely unusable. Not a realistic assumption.